Anonymous wrote:People are missing this from the OP:
Public K:
-Is a brand new program that is combining 3 school districts to offer full day K at a satellite location. DD would be in the first class (possibly worried about kinks in the program).
Normally I'd say start in the public school at K so that she can acclimate to how it works, make friends, and stay on track with her cohort. But this sounds like it will be chaotic and potentially not that useful for those things at all. It's not even at the elementary school where she will attend 1st grade, and combines kids from multiple districts so no guaranty that there would be continuity between K and 1st.
I would also guess that since the program is brand new and combining several districts, that many parents will choose to keep their kids in whatever they had planned for private K before this program was introduced. Meaning that 1st grade will be the first true year of OP's child's cohort, and she won't be entering as the odd kid out.
For these reasons, combined with the aftercare issues and the fact that OP likes the current school and the schedule and location are ideal for their situation, I'd stay where I was and just move to public at 1st. It would not be worth it to me to save around 8k I'd already budgeted for school to deal with those drawbacks.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Sorry- to clarify we will be going public in 1st grade either way. We are in a great school district.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private, we did a private for K-1st and it was so much better as more attention, smaller class and convient. By the time you pay after care, costs may be similar.
How would that work? It sounds like they’d need about 3 hours of care (before and after care) daily at the public school whereas at the private they’re paying tuition plus after care costs. No way will it work out to be the same cost.
Public K:
-Is a brand new program that is combining 3 school districts to offer full day K at a satellite location. DD would be in the first class (possibly worried about kinks in the program).
Anonymous wrote:Private, we did a private for K-1st and it was so much better as more attention, smaller class and convient. By the time you pay after care, costs may be similar.
Anonymous wrote:Our oldest child will be in K next year and our district voted in full day K for the first time next year. I can't decide if I want to keep her at her current school (parochial- we're not religious) or put her in the new public K.
Current school:
-She's been there for two years of PreK and has a solid group of friends/is very comfortable there
-It's at the end of our block so we walk her there and back everyday which is probably my favorite parts of the day
-The school hours are 7:45am-2:45pm and then we do aftercare til 4:15pm so I work from home 8-4, have her home by 4:30pm, and it's a really nice balance for all of us
-Tuition is $795/month plus aftercare $150/month
Public K:
-Is a brand new program that is combining 3 school districts to offer full day K at a satellite location. DD would be in the first class (possibly worried about kinks in the program).
-10 minute drive away (opposite direction of our younger child's daycare)
-School hours are 9am-3:30pm so we'd likely need before and after care.
-No tuition
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Sorry- to clarify we will be going public in 1st grade either way. We are in a great school district.
Anonymous wrote:Private - with the caveat that another PP mentioned about academics. You'll want to make sure the current program has a bit of rigor so that your DD is up to speed in 1st grade.
Particularly if you are in a great school district, the public K may be very academic-focused.
Curious if you are in a smaller town in New England? I am, and we still have some towns without full day K. If I were going through this kind of transformation locally, I'd be fine not having my kid be a guinea pig for this new consolidated K program.